Storytelling,
Music, Myth
& Ritual Art
Mythic Players is the performing arm of Temple of the Goddess whose mission is to create intentional art that evokes the power of change; to explore the connection between art, spirit, and healing.
The work focuses on the timeless gift of myth and archetype-both ancient and contemporary. The components of our ensemble include musicians, dancers, actors, puppetry, as well as a full choral group. Our performances are multi-cultural, ritual theater that deftly combines music, dance, mythology, and art to re-connect us to the Earth. With elaborate costumes and masks, our myths and storytelling are Universal with a focus on cultural, ecological, and spiritual insights.
The goal is to weave together multi-media art forms into a multi-cultural tapestry that celebrates life, the Earth, and the seasons of our own psyches. This visionary ensemble collaboratively creates transformational experiences through symbols, myth, and archetype.
Mythic Players, a theatrical ensemble in Los Angeles, Ca. since 2004, are a multi-generational troop ranging in ages from seven to seventy. The components of our theater troop include the Mythic Choral, ensemble musicians, dancers, and actors, many of whom are students, and or graduates, of the Los Angeles County High School for the Arts. Our performers are professionals in their own fields and come together to offer their gifts and talents in service to the Los Angeles community and to the Earth. These theatrical celebrations are directed toward family and community and we’ve found that children of all ages surrender themselves to the flow of this beautiful evening of art. In turn, we are inspired by the children who involve themselves so completely with all the elements of our performances.
Sometimes described as Ritual Cirque, our ritual theater performances are two hours in length and built musically and artistically around the seasons of the earth. An evening performance might typically include devotional Kirtan music, Native American chanting, African drumming, and the Temple of the Goddess choir. Dance offerings could include ballet, African Yoruba dancing, modern, as well as veiled ritual dancing.
In addition to music and dance, our multi-media programs also incorporate myth, liturgy, spoken word, puppetry, visual art, and participatory theater which fuses drum and dance with personal enactment. The music and dance for each performance are carefully chosen to lead to the enactment of a modern-day one-act myth, usually 10-15 minutes in length. Each myth has a simple lesson or principle, a hero’s journey that the protagonist embarks upon. Characters in the myths are often masked and costumed and the storytelling is accompanied by an evocative soundscape by our musicians. The messages woven in our myths are Universal and end by inviting the audience to dance and perform a personal enactment mirrored by the protagonist in the myth.
Our productions weave together multi-media art forms into a multi-cultural tapestry that celebrates the seasons of the Earth and embraces all spiritual traditions. The music and dance are representative of many different artists, groups, and cultures-ancient and modern, each a many-hued thread of race, age, language, culture, and religion.
Why focus on the seasons of the year?
The seasons and all their changes are in me.
— Henry David Thoreau
We believe that the Earth’s changing seasons are a reflection of the potential changes awaiting within our consciousness with the potential for deeply felt spiritual, cultural, and ecological meaning. The Earth’s seasons also represent the life cycle of continual birth, death, and renewal as expressed in the seasonal cycles we experience around us. These changing seasons also represent a psychological map of consciousness facilitating human growth. They contain the framework for personal transformation, rites of passage, healing, empowerment, and manifestation.
Live in each season as it passes;
breathe the air, drink the drink, taste the fruit,
and resign yourself to the influence of the earth.
— Henry David Thoreau
Click here to go to Mythic Players Website.